quinta-feira, 23 de setembro de 2010

Purslow rejects requests that Liverpool would go bust.

Liverpool, CEO Christian Purslow dismissed club will make bankruptcy fears current property issues cannot be correctly resolved.

Christian PurslowPA PhotosChristian Purslow says Liverpool are a "cost-effective" club

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However, he warned Tom Hicks, which attempts to collect a package to restructure its loans and redeem his colleague Co-propriétaire George Gillett, the Council will allow use of Liverpool assets as security in any refinancing agreement.

Two must ?237 million Americans plues charges additional to the Royal Bank of Scotland and the lending huge penalty is for reimbursement or renegotiation of mid-October, as the club has still not been sold, either option appears little likely, that is why Hicks is trying to find funding elsewhere.

Concern has been expressed that it should fail then there is a chance outside, that the Bank could resume club and it might eventually end up in the administration.

Purslow said that it was not the case.

"Liverpool Football Club is not go bust,", he said. "".We have a very healthy business with record revenues and we are very profitable.

"We have cash, we are solvents, we facilitated Bank that last beyond the end of next season and we are strongly carried out by the Premier League."

"To achieve our license UEFA we crossed that processes and that they were very satisfied with what they have seen - so I can design a situation where Liverpool Football Club could go in the administration.".

"The question today is that too many of our income is used for loans service implemented when the club was treat acheté.Nous this question.Quand sell us debt will be reduced or go away, businesses that will make us more profitable club in the Championship."

Hicks has already had a refinancing project refused by the Board of Directors of the club, where the two out-voted Purslow, American President Martin Broughton and commercial Director Ian Ayre.

When the Texan entered into discussions with the investment group Blackstone last week the rest of the Board of Directors began to study the possibility of a legal dispute.

Blackstone ruled himself out of the proposal on Monday and the Purslow noted no new refinancing would be allowed to use the assets as Anfield, Melwood club training ground or even players.

"That would require approval of the Commission and the other members of Council have clearly that is not what we want to see happen."[It is] highly unlikely, "he says LFC TV." ""Any increase in debt by Liverpool Football Club requires approval by the full Board.

"Non directors have clearly that is not what we want to see happen."




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